Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, first published in 1852, has been credited with turning the tide of public opinion on the issue of slavery in America. For most Americans in the early-to-mid nineteenth century, in both the north and the south, slavery was not an issue that affected them personally. Most American voters were not slave owners, ...
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Posted by Josh Kimbrell on July 7, 2015|Comments Off on Statement on the Confederate Flag at the Statehouse

I love the south, and I deeply love South Carolina. All of my adult life, I have fought to defend the values and culture of this state; I have championed our commitment to traditional American values and individual liberties. That’s why I have carefully weighed the decision being debated in our state over the Confederate battle flag at the Statehouse. This ...
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Posted by Josh Kimbrell on June 26, 2015|Comments Off on Trampling The Constitution

Today the Supreme Court trampled the Constitution of the United States of America.
No where in The Constitution is the federal government granted jurisdiction over marriage laws, nor does it give the Supreme Court the right to trample the decision of the majority of state legislatures (and voters) that have affirmed natural marriage.
Today’s decision overturns ...
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Posted by Josh Kimbrell on June 16, 2015|Comments Off on Putting an End to Pronouns: The LGBT Lobby’s New Front in its War on Reason

English speakers, from our first days of speaking, learn to identify the people around us with pronouns. Toddlers know well how to identify their mothers as “she” and their fathers as “he,” and to use other gender-specific pronouns that are part of everyday speech. For most of us, the use of gender pronouns is part of meaningful communication, not malicious ...
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